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It has been an inauspicious start to the campaign for the Tories – politicalbetting.com

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  • CleitophonCleitophon Posts: 599
    Tories going into the 4th of July: "LET ME TELL YOU SOMETHING"
    🤣🤣🤣🤣

    https://youtu.be/iIl8aFAeX9Q?si=LTycHFNA9TTztcYW
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,616

    The increased tuition fees will be a reality, the 'forced labour' a hypothetical.

    And a reality that teenagers today will be paying decades after talk of national service are long forgotten.
    We’ve had a period of high inflation, in part because of Tory misrule. Universities’ costs have increased. They therefore need more income. If that doesn’t come from an inflation-linked rise in tuition fees, where does it come from?
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,083
    Foxy said:

    Surely the first step is to decide what skills they should acquire by their compulsory volunteering, and how on earth it stimulates a work ethic.

    Don't conscript them first then wonder what you are going to do with them. That will just teach them to skive off.
    Wasn’t the ‘keep your head down, never volunteer for anything’ culture the principal product of national service the last time around?
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,258

    Utterly absurd misrepresentation.
    Exactly

    Good luck getting any work out of an 18 year old.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,133

    If the policy is to be seen as 'forced labour', does that term also apply to other countries that run similar schemes?
    Yes.
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 30,075
    Foxy said:

    It does make sense to keep the Personal Allwance at or above the State Pension, for the sake of simplicity, but that should really apply to everyone.

    [rest snipped]
    Does it (sort of) already apply to everyone? Are other benefits subject to income tax?

    It turns out some benefits are taxable and others are not. From the government's website:-

    The most common benefits that you pay Income Tax on are:
    • Bereavement Allowance (previously Widow’s pension)
    • Carer’s Allowance or (in Scotland only) Carer Support Payment
    • contribution-based Employment and Support Allowance (ESA)
    • Incapacity Benefit (from the 29th week you get it)
    • Jobseeker’s Allowance (JSA)
    • pensions paid by the Industrial Death Benefit scheme
    • the State Pension
    • Widowed Parent’s Allowance
    • Tax-free state benefits
    The most common state benefits you do not have to pay Income Tax on are:
    • Attendance Allowance
    • Bereavement support payment
    • Child Benefit (income-based - use the Child Benefit tax calculator to see if you’ll have to pay tax)
    • Child Tax Credit
    • Disability Living Allowance (DLA)
    • free TV licence for over-75s
    • Guardian’s Allowance
    • Housing Benefit
    • Income Support - though you may have to pay tax on Income Support if you’re involved in a strike
    • income-related Employment and Support Allowance (ESA)
    • Industrial Injuries Benefit
    • lump-sum bereavement payments
    • Maternity Allowance
    • Pension Credit
    • Personal Independence Payment (PIP)
    • Severe Disablement Allowance
    • Universal Credit
    • War Widow’s Pension
    • Winter Fuel Payments and Christmas Bonus
    • Working Tax Credit
    https://www.gov.uk/income-tax/taxfree-and-taxable-state-benefits
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,133

    Does it (sort of) already apply to everyone? Are other benefits subject to income tax?

    It turns out some benefits are taxable and others are not. From the government's website:-

    The most common benefits that you pay Income Tax on are:
    • Bereavement Allowance (previously Widow’s pension)
    • Carer’s Allowance or (in Scotland only) Carer Support Payment
    • contribution-based Employment and Support Allowance (ESA)
    • Incapacity Benefit (from the 29th week you get it)
    • Jobseeker’s Allowance (JSA)
    • pensions paid by the Industrial Death Benefit scheme
    • the State Pension
    • Widowed Parent’s Allowance
    • Tax-free state benefits
    The most common state benefits you do not have to pay Income Tax on are:
    • Attendance Allowance
    • Bereavement support payment
    • Child Benefit (income-based - use the Child Benefit tax calculator to see if you’ll have to pay tax)
    • Child Tax Credit
    • Disability Living Allowance (DLA)
    • free TV licence for over-75s
    • Guardian’s Allowance
    • Housing Benefit
    • Income Support - though you may have to pay tax on Income Support if you’re involved in a strike
    • income-related Employment and Support Allowance (ESA)
    • Industrial Injuries Benefit
    • lump-sum bereavement payments
    • Maternity Allowance
    • Pension Credit
    • Personal Independence Payment (PIP)
    • Severe Disablement Allowance
    • Universal Credit
    • War Widow’s Pension
    • Winter Fuel Payments and Christmas Bonus
    • Working Tax Credit
    https://www.gov.uk/income-tax/taxfree-and-taxable-state-benefits
    I think that highlights what a mess the current system of tax and benefits are.
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 30,075
    Scott_xP said:

    @MrHarryCole

    Labour gloves off over Tory pensions policy:

    “Rishi Sunak is planning to reward Britain’s pensioners for their loyalty by stabbing them in the back, just like he did to Boris Johnson and just like he has done to his own MPs.”

    Actually, Labour seems to be attacking the proposed NI cuts on the basis of their putative link to pensions. Clever politics, perhaps, even though everyone knows it is largely a government fiction that pensions are paid from NI.
  • megasaurmegasaur Posts: 586
    Heathener said:

    I see that the Pope has been caught out making a derogatory remark about homosexuals. The term ‘frociaggione’ roughly translates as ‘faggots’. He’s still not prepared to permit gay priests (even though there are thousands of them) or married priests, but leaves other priests free to abuse children. And if you think this is a problem only for the RC’s, the Church of England has still tied itself in absurd knots on the issue. Bear this in mind next time you drag their antediluvian beliefs into support against trans rights. Any doctrine based on the nonsense that man was created from a woman’s spare rib in the image of a God (who most believers deep down still think has a penis) should be given short shrift. If you have pages written by bigoted old men, you’ll get a god in that image.

    The Church has been on the wrong side of just about every piece of human progress, often in particularly nasty ways.

    https://news.sky.com/story/pope-francis-used-derogatory-term-for-lgtb-community-reports-claim-13144217

    Frociaggine, only one o, and it means the condition of being a frocio, so faggotry not faggots.

    Conflating the homosexual with the trans means misunderstanding and patronizing both groups in about equal measure.
  • Peter_the_PunterPeter_the_Punter Posts: 14,634
    IanB2 said:

    Wasn’t the ‘keep your head down, never volunteer for anything’ culture the principal product of national service the last time around?
    If my Dad was anything to go by I should a culture of resenting and obstructing authority was very much inculcated by The Army.
  • SouthamObserverSouthamObserver Posts: 40,017

    If the policy is to be seen as 'forced labour', does that term also apply to other countries that run similar schemes?

    Which other countries force 18 year-olds to work for free without it being part of a wider package of benefits, such as free university education (or much lower tuition fees), generous welfare provisions for young people, the right to live, work and study in multiple countries etc etc? Comparing what the government is proposing to what happens in other countries, without looking at the wider context of what those countries’ schemes are part of is nonsensical.

  • HeathenerHeathener Posts: 7,085
    megasaur said:


    Conflating the homosexual with the trans means misunderstanding and patronizing both groups in about equal measure.
    It’s of a piece. Bigotry writ large.

    Of course, trans haters can’t stand the idea of linking the two example of bigotry. It has ever been thus, with all areas of discrimination.

    LGBGTQ+ forever
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 65,011
    edited May 2024
    Good morning

    Our Canadian daughter in law is travelling to London today and flies to Vancouver tomorrow whilst our son spends a couple of weeks more with us

    All Llandudno Junction to Euston trains have been cancelled today due to crew shortages leaving her with no option but take the Manchester Airport train to Chester, then a train to Crewe, then to Euston arriving much later and missing an appointment she had in London today

    The railways are truly broken and is Starmer just going to concede all ASLEF's demands reinforcing the view that the unions are holding our railways to ransom
  • SouthamObserverSouthamObserver Posts: 40,017
    Foxy said:

    Whether paid or not it is still forced labour.

    Yes, that’s fair. The government is proposing forced, unpaid labour.

  • HeathenerHeathener Posts: 7,085
    rcs1000 said:

    Exactly

    Good luck getting any work out of an 18 year old.
    This kind of youth-bashing by older folk is appalling.

    Unfortunately hatred is surfacing during this campaign, and we’ve still got c. 5 weeks to go.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,303

    Which other countries force 18 year-olds to work for free without it being part of a wider package of benefits, such as free university education (or much lower tuition fees), generous welfare provisions for young people, the right to live, work and study in multiple countries etc etc? Comparing what the government is proposing to what happens in other countries, without looking at the wider context of what those countries’ schemes are part of is nonsensical.
    LOL. So the scheme itself is fine; but the 'wider package' is the problem? You do realise that as every country will have different 'wider packages'; it means this argument can never be proved wrong?

    I'm not in favour of this scheme, but some of the arguments being used against it are ridiculous. Including yours.
  • SouthamObserverSouthamObserver Posts: 40,017

    Good morning

    Our Canadian daughter in law is travelling to London today and flies to Vancouver tomorrow whilst our son spends a couple of weeks more with us

    All Llandudno Junction to Euston trains have been cancelled today due to crew shortages leaving her with no option but take the Manchester Airport train to Chester, then a train to Crewe, then to Euston arriving much later and missing an appointment she had in London today

    The railways are truly broken and is Starmer just going to concede all ASLEF's demands reinforcing the view that the unions are holding our railways to ransom

    Crew shortages imply a lack of crew.

  • megasaurmegasaur Posts: 586
    Heathener said:

    It’s of a piece. Bigotry writ large.

    Of course, trans haters can’t stand the idea of linking the two example of bigotry. It has ever been thus, with all areas of discrimination.

    LGBGTQ+ forever
    Yes. Just as let's say Pakistanis and Zimbabweans have no interesting differences from one another. How's it going in the 1950s?
  • rkrkrkrkrkrk Posts: 8,628
    Bit of a hostage to fortune here, but I suspect this campaign is actually going quite well for Rishi.

    He's making headlines with his policies- he is getting a hearing. I suspect his ideas are popular with his core demographics, and maybe beyond them.

    Enough to win? I'd say no. Maybe a hung parliament?

    But this is probably the best strategy for him... he has to try to claim to be the change candidate whilst making sure he hoovers up the pensioner vote.

  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 65,011

    Crew shortages imply a lack of crew.

    Overtime bans
  • eekeek Posts: 29,696
    edited May 2024

    Crew shortages imply a lack of crew.

    +1 would need to speak to my mate who lives there but I believe that train not working is a regular occurrence

    But it’s a staff issue - very few drivers know the route and the train (both of which is required) so it’s possible that a combination of school holidays and someone being ill can knock the early morning train off.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,303
    rcs1000 said:

    Exactly

    Good luck getting any work out of an 18 year old.
    It can (and does) happen. At our local park run, we often have young kids turning out to volunteer as part of their DoE scheme. At 8.40 on a Sunday morning, in all weathers. I think one continues volunteering occasionally.

    The yoof aren't as useless and Kevin-like as we oldies like to paint them. :)
  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 18,310
    Foxy said:

    Whether paid or not it is still forced labour.
    And that's why "ah, but education until 18 is compulsory" isn't the gotcha some hope for.

    For a start, that education can be one day a week if you are in employment or doing an apprenticeship. So there's some pragmatic flex.

    Also, in reality, we still have ten percent of the cohort who are NEETs, for whatever reason. Education to eighteen is normalised, but not enforced.

    One of the few bits of the "plan" that are clear is that the forced uptake of this scheme, should it ever happen, will be as close as dammit to one hundred percent, even if they don't know how.
  • IcarusIcarus Posts: 1,001
    Foxy said:

    It does make sense to keep the Personal Allwance at or above the State Pension, for the sake of simplicity, but that should really apply to everyone.

    Interesting figures here on the problem of having such an elderly cohort of voters:

    The estimates for where the 14m 2019 Conservatives are today:
    6.4m (46%) Still Conservative
    1.7m (12%) Don't Know
    1.7m (12%) Labour
    1.7m (12%) Reform
    1.2m (8%) Deceased
    0.5m (4%) Lib Dem
    0.5m (4%) Would Not Vote
    0.2m (1%) Green
    0.1m (1%) Other

    For the 10.3m 2019 Labour voters:
    7.8m (76%) are still Labour
    0.6m (6%) Green
    0.5m (5%) Don't Know
    0.3m (3%) Lib Dem
    0.3m (3%) Deceased
    0.3m (3%) Won't Vote
    0.2m (2%) Conservative
    0.1m (1%) Reform
    0.1m (1%) Other
    0.05m (1%) SNP/PC

    Of 3.7m 2019 LD voters currently:
    1.9m (52%) remain LD
    0.8m (21%) Labour
    0.4m (10%) Don't Know
    0.2m (5%) Dead
    0.2m (4%) Conservative
    0.1m (3%) Green
    0.1m (2%) Won't Vote
    0.1m (2%) Reform
    (This actually adds to 3.8m due to rounding error).

    Figures from Jan 12 so probably shifted a bit further since.

    https://x.com/Dylan_Difford/status/1745869071428575725?t=p-lfI5Z_hmbPVQm0kFNOww&s=19

    So of the 1.6 million 2019 voters RIP, 1.2 million voted Tory. In order to retain electoral viability the Tories need to replace those voters. They seem to have no plans to do so.
    For the dead to vote you will now need their driving licence and at least look a bit like the photo -though you could keep your thumb over it.

    Vote early, vote often!
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 65,011
    eek said:

    +1 would need to speak to my mate who lives there but I believe that train not working is a regular occurrence
    All of them
  • SouthamObserverSouthamObserver Posts: 40,017

    LOL. So the scheme itself is fine; but the 'wider package' is the problem? You do realise that as every country will have different 'wider packages'; it means this argument can never be proved wrong?

    I'm not in favour of this scheme, but some of the arguments being used against it are ridiculous. Including yours.

    No, a scheme of forced, unpaid labour for 18-year olds is not fine in the absence of a wider social compact which as well as imposing obligations delivers benefits to those who are conscripted. I am sorry you don’t understand that argument but that’s your problem, not mine.

  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,133

    Good morning

    Our Canadian daughter in law is travelling to London today and flies to Vancouver tomorrow whilst our son spends a couple of weeks more with us

    All Llandudno Junction to Euston trains have been cancelled today due to crew shortages leaving her with no option but take the Manchester Airport train to Chester, then a train to Crewe, then to Euston arriving much later and missing an appointment she had in London today

    The railways are truly broken and is Starmer just going to concede all ASLEF's demands reinforcing the view that the unions are holding our railways to ransom

    ASLEF (and other Rail Unions) are not on strike today, so why blame them?
  • HeathenerHeathener Posts: 7,085
    rkrkrk said:

    Bit of a hostage to fortune here, but I suspect this campaign is actually going quite well for Rishi.

    He's making headlines with his policies- he is getting a hearing. I suspect his ideas are popular with his core demographics, and maybe beyond them.

    Enough to win? I'd say no. Maybe a hung parliament?

    But this is probably the best strategy for him... he has to try to claim to be the change candidate whilst making sure he hoovers up the pensioner vote.

    Let’s wait and see how the opinion polls are looking, after the bank holiday weekend and half-term have shaken out of the system, before we rush to judgements.

    However, I would comment that he won’t be ‘hoovering up’ the pensioner vote, not even with a £2000 bribe. They’re not stupid. It’s no good putting money in their bank accounts with one hand, whilst simultaneously removing it with the other whilst running down public services including, and especially, the NHS. We underestimate the importance of healthcare to older people at our peril.
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 65,011
    Foxy said:

    ASLEF (and other Rail Unions) are not on strike today, so why blame them?
    Overtime bans
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,133

    It can (and does) happen. At our local park run, we often have young kids turning out to volunteer as part of their DoE scheme. At 8.40 on a Sunday morning, in all weathers. I think one continues volunteering occasionally.

    The yoof aren't as useless and Kevin-like as we oldies like to paint them. :)
    Yes, but those are volunteers, not conscripts.
  • SouthamObserverSouthamObserver Posts: 40,017
    edited May 2024

    And that's why "ah, but education until 18 is compulsory" isn't the gotcha some hope for.

    For a start, that education can be one day a week if you are in employment or doing an apprenticeship. So there's some pragmatic flex.

    Also, in reality, we still have ten percent of the cohort who are NEETs, for whatever reason. Education to eighteen is normalised, but not enforced.

    One of the few bits of the "plan" that are clear is that the forced uptake of this scheme, should it ever happen, will be as close as dammit to one hundred percent, even if they don't know how.

    Education is, at least in theory, a benefit. Yes, you have to go to school but in return you learn stuff. And we don’t force adults to go to school.

  • MonksfieldMonksfield Posts: 2,861
    malcolmg said:

    They would just waste it for sure, mine is more than £3K a year already so we are being robbed as it is , what do the F**kers do with all the money they steal off people, it certainly does not seem to be spent on services.
    Doesn’t Ayrshire have roads, bins, social care, police or education then?
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,133

    Overtime bans
    So the service cannot run on its existing staff. That's poor workforce planning, not an overtime ban.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,696

    Overtime bans
    Not at the moment - and my source is Avanti’s union negotiator
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,575

    NEW THREAD

  • SouthamObserverSouthamObserver Posts: 40,017

    Overtime bans

    Why is overtime required?

  • HeathenerHeathener Posts: 7,085
    megasaur said:

    Yes. Just as let's say Pakistanis and Zimbabweans have no interesting differences from one another. How's it going in the 1950s?
    I think I know a lot more about this than you do. This kind of bigotry is all of a piece. I recommend you read the sociologist René Girard’s Scapegoat theories, amongst others. When society finishes parodying one set of ‘other’ it moves on to the next, and then the next.

    Removing the T from LGBGTQ+ is a tactic of those who are obsessed with the ‘does it have a penis’ reductionism, which is about the size of their brains.

    Fortunately those like you are on the wrong side of history, and about to be consigned to the dustbin of discourse on the subject.

    Roll on the Labour victory!
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,133
    Heathener said:

    Let’s wait and see how the opinion polls are looking, after the bank holiday weekend and half-term have shaken out of the system, before we rush to judgements.

    However, I would comment that he won’t be ‘hoovering up’ the pensioner vote, not even with a £2000 bribe. They’re not stupid. It’s no good putting money in their bank accounts with one hand, whilst simultaneously removing it with the other whilst running down public services including, and especially, the NHS. We underestimate the importance of healthcare to older people at our peril.
    The Tories seem keen to bribe the pensioners with everything apart from a functioning NHS and Social Care system.

    It's not very well thought through.
  • rkrkrkrkrkrk Posts: 8,628
    Quite a scoop in the guardian... head of Mossad threatening the ICC head's family
    https://www.theguardian.com/world/article/2024/may/28/israeli-spy-chief-icc-prosecutor-war-crimes-inquiry
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,050

    We’ve had a period of high inflation, in part because of Tory misrule. Universities’ costs have increased. They therefore need more income. If that doesn’t come from an inflation-linked rise in tuition fees, where does it come from?
    Cutting their cloth and get rid of the bloated management structures eating up all the cash. Tory freee for all on huge salaries for doing diddly squat whilst shafting staff that do the actual work.
  • GhedebravGhedebrav Posts: 3,860

    I've just had a taste.

    Corbyn won't win.

    I've just had a taste.

    Corbyn won't win.
    I’m genuinely not sure. Fair play to you for hopping on now though.
  • booksellerbookseller Posts: 508
    Heathener said:

    This kind of youth-bashing by older folk is appalling.

    Unfortunately hatred is surfacing during this campaign, and we’ve still got c. 5 weeks to go.
    Exactly.

    I have two teen boys. One at university one at college. Both doing gig jobs to pay their way. Youngest is in a band and 3 of the lads all have part-time jobs (the other is doing GCSEs). One helps care for his Dad who had a stroke last Summer.

    Your characterisation of young people is not just wrong, it's a rather sad cliché. I would actually go out and get to know some young people (and I mean listen to them, don't just 'give them the benefit of your opinion). You never know, you might just be pleasantly surprised.

    "If we open a quarrel between the past and the present, we shall find that we have lost the future."

  • MonksfieldMonksfield Posts: 2,861

    Good morning

    Our Canadian daughter in law is travelling to London today and flies to Vancouver tomorrow whilst our son spends a couple of weeks more with us

    All Llandudno Junction to Euston trains have been cancelled today due to crew shortages leaving her with no option but take the Manchester Airport train to Chester, then a train to Crewe, then to Euston arriving much later and missing an appointment she had in London today

    The railways are truly broken and is Starmer just going to concede all ASLEF's demands reinforcing the view that the unions are holding our railways to ransom

    Drivel. The railways are broken because it has suited all sides to embed a culture of rest day working, driven by goodwill. Originally this covered for low pay, but post privatisation, the franchises have allowed the unions to set their own conditions. The franchises have failed to build resilience into their bids, giving Unions the opportunity to hold them hostage.

    I know alot of rail staff well, and it has to be one of the few industries with shop stewards who are both right wing and militant as hell.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,486
    .

    It's not "forced labour" and it's absurd to suggest it is, anymore than compulsory education to the age of 18 is "forced labour".
    This isn't education.
    And it's subject to compulsion.

    I asked how you would characterise it; I already know you don't like my honest appraisal.
  • megasaurmegasaur Posts: 586

    No, a scheme of forced, unpaid labour for 18-year olds is not fine in the absence of a wider social compact which as well as imposing obligations delivers benefits to those who are conscripted. I am sorry you don’t understand that argument but that’s your problem, not mine.

    https://www.forces.net/world/which-countries-still-have-conscription

    No idea of the reliability of the source. I like the Dutch approach:

    "Officially, the Netherlands has mandatory military service, however, it is not enforced.

    After turning 17, a conscript receives a letter from the Ministry of Defence stating they are registered for military service. But, there is no obligation to show up.'

    In Austria and Switzerland the basic obligation is military service, with alternatives only permitted to conscientious objectors. That makes more sense to me - we are (I assume) comfortable with the thought of conscription in time of war, and if it is necessary for national security we should be in peacetime too

    Incidentally we already routinely force adult citizens into the most onerous, distressing and traumatizing labour imaginable called jury service. Another case where it's a horrible job but someone has to do it.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,050

    Doesn’t Ayrshire have roads, bins, social care, police or education then?
    Your point is caller? As elsewhere it has shit roads , shit social care , invisible police and a few schools. Over £3K to get bins lifted once every 3 weeks and huge potholes on all the roads. I could employ private companies to do it for a lot less.
  • CiceroCicero Posts: 3,390

    Whereas the public spirited LibDems favour PR because it is fair and not because they hope to be permanently in government as the centrist party in a coalition.
    The Lib Dems want PR as part of a serious modernisation of our Victorian political system. STV gives more power to the voters, FPTP or lists give more power to the parties. The last few years of Tory mess was based on giving 100% power to a party winning 40% of the vote. It is quite clearly time to accept the fact that our political system needs serious change. PR is a necessary but not sufficient part of this change.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,050
    eek said:

    +1 would need to speak to my mate who lives there but I believe that train not working is a regular occurrence

    But it’s a staff issue - very few drivers know the route and the train (both of which is required) so it’s possible that a combination of school holidays and someone being ill can knock the early morning train off.
    Feck's sake , they don't know how to press a few buttons and turn a wheel , pampered arses right enough. Imagine lorry drivers saying "Sorry Boss I don't know that road". Useless overpaid lazy twats.
  • ToryJimToryJim Posts: 4,192
    Heathener said:

    This kind of youth-bashing by older folk is appalling.

    Unfortunately hatred is surfacing during this campaign, and we’ve still got c. 5 weeks to go.
    Says the person who went on what could be interpreted as a hate flecked tirade against Christian beliefs not many posts ago that was devoid of any actual understanding of the religion in question and seemed to merely stem from deep seated prejudice.

  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,153
    Foxy said:

    ASLEF (and other Rail Unions) are not on strike today, so why blame them?
    It's easier than thinking about the problem.

    Network Rail aren't allowed to recruit new signallers until there's a vacancy to fill (would be a waste of money otherwise). It takes about two months for basic training for a new signaller, and then longer for training on a specific route. So, by design of their recruitment policy, there will be a shortage of signallers.

    A large proportion of existing signallers are approaching retirement age. Rather than anticipate the need to replace these signallers, Network Rail is forced by the policy dictated to it, to wait until they've gone to replace them.

    I don't know about the situation with respect to drivers specifically, but it wouldn't surprise me if there were similar rules. I remember there were problems immediately after privatisation when the new franchises sacked too many drivers.
  • StillWatersStillWaters Posts: 9,710

    If the policy is to be seen as 'forced labour', does that term also apply to other countries that run similar schemes?
    They are trying to create false equivalence between, say, the Chinese treatment of the Uighars and the Tories.

    It’s the debasement of language for political effect.

    Tiresome, really
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,118
    megasaur said:

    https://www.forces.net/world/which-countries-still-have-conscription

    No idea of the reliability of the source. I like the Dutch approach:

    "Officially, the Netherlands has mandatory military service, however, it is not enforced.

    After turning 17, a conscript receives a letter from the Ministry of Defence stating they are registered for military service. But, there is no obligation to show up.'

    In Austria and Switzerland the basic obligation is military service, with alternatives only permitted to conscientious objectors. That makes more sense to me - we are (I assume) comfortable with the thought of conscription in time of war, and if it is necessary for national security we should be in peacetime too

    Incidentally we already routinely force adult citizens into the most onerous, distressing and traumatizing labour imaginable called jury service. Another case where it's a horrible job but someone has to do it.
    15 jurors plus 5 substitutes will be empanelled for my new case today. They will appear tomorrow and at least to the end of the week, more probably into Monday of next week.

    The substitutes are used if any members are found not able to serve tomorrow but then released. They receive derisory payment which does not reimburse them for lost wages. They have to listen to pretty grisly and disgusting stuff. You can often see distress from this. They spend a lot of time sitting around waiting whilst the court resolves legal issues. Its a lot to ask of anyone.

    And yet justice depends on it. In the High Court, at least, most juries take their role very seriously. They pay close attention. And, by and large, they come back with reasonable verdicts. It is not a perfect system but it is better than any alternative that I have seen.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,303
    Foxy said:

    Yes, but those are volunteers, not conscripts.
    I know. I was responding to RCS's comment, and showing that some 18 year olds can, and do, do work. Even unpaid work.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,303

    No, a scheme of forced, unpaid labour for 18-year olds is not fine in the absence of a wider social compact which as well as imposing obligations delivers benefits to those who are conscripted. I am sorry you don’t understand that argument but that’s your problem, not mine.
    LOL. You should really listen to yourself. This policy is cr@p, and there is lots to be said against it. But you're going for a stupid argument, and one that relies not on the policy itself, but on some fuckwit intangible 'wider social compact', just because you want to make the policy sound like it is something the Chinese government would come up with.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,170

    No, a scheme of forced, unpaid labour for 18-year olds is not fine in the absence of a wider social compact which as well as imposing obligations delivers benefits to those who are conscripted. I am sorry you don’t understand that argument but that’s your problem, not mine.

    No, you don't have an argument - you're simply fishing around for attack lines. If Labour were doing it you'd be cheering it.

    It's utterly pathetic.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,170
    Nigelb said:

    .

    This isn't education.
    And it's subject to compulsion.

    I asked how you would characterise it; I already know you don't like my honest appraisal.
    I'd characterise it as a form of National Service.

    Do you think Jury Duty is forced labour?
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,153
    malcolmg said:

    Feck's sake , they don't know how to press a few buttons and turn a wheel , pampered arses right enough. Imagine lorry drivers saying "Sorry Boss I don't know that road". Useless overpaid lazy twats.
    Trains generally go so fast that they can't stop in the distance visible to the driver, so it's kinda important that the driver knows the route, rather than reacting to it as it happens.
  • ToryJimToryJim Posts: 4,192
    Cicero said:

    The Lib Dems want PR as part of a serious modernisation of our Victorian political system. STV gives more power to the voters, FPTP or lists give more power to the parties. The last few years of Tory mess was based on giving 100% power to a party winning 40% of the vote. It is quite clearly time to accept the fact that our political system needs serious change. PR is a necessary but not sufficient part of this change.
    I’m not sure that voters end up with more power in PR systems when all the policies that attract people to support one party over another tend to be the things which first get sacrificed in order to get the numbers together for a parliamentary majority. I’m not sure pointing at interesting coalition voting maths when the program of government is a Frankenstein’s monster of all the ideas that didn’t shift votes is a particularly useful exercise.

    I’m open to persuasion on voting systems reform but I’d need a lot of convincing that you’d end up with something a lot better than present. I’d hate to end up in the position that voting for this or that side makes no difference as you always end up with the same policy outcome. Worse would be a situation where you get a minor party that is a permanent feature of government switching who they prop up depending on who gets the lions share. Worse still would be a fringe player exerting outsize influence by being key to a majority and therefore slowly yanking the centre of gravity to the fringes.
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 30,702
    Scott_xP said:

    Nigel Fucking Farage will not do it because he thinks he is better than a clown in a bin. Doing it would confirm he is just as big a joke.
    He did it with Nick Clegg, that was far more degrading than debating a clown in a bin.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,183
    megasaur said:

    Frociaggine, only one o, and it means the condition of being a frocio, so faggotry not faggots.

    Conflating the homosexual with the trans means misunderstanding and patronizing both groups in about equal measure.
    Well then, true equality has been reached. Rejoice... :)

    (ducks)
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